2014 Amsterdam drug deaths

2014 Amsterdam drug deaths

Warning signs in Amsterdam
Date November 2014
Location Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Deaths 3
Injuries 17 (September - November 2014)
3 (February 2015)

On 25 November 2014 two British tourists aged 20 and 21 died in a hotel room in Amsterdam, the Netherlands, after snorting white heroin that was sold as cocaine by a street dealer.[1] The bodies were found less than a month after another British tourist died in similar circumstances. At least 17 other people have had medical treatment after taking the white heroin.[2] Health authorities in Amsterdam are warning of the dangerous drugs being sold. Large signs were set up at popular tourist locations in the city.[3] An award of 15.000 Euro is offered for tips about the dealer of the drugs.[4] On 20 January 2015 the last warning signs were removed from the city because there weren't any incidents anymore.[5]

In the night of 25 February 2015 three Danish tourist became unwell after using white heroine, but left the hospital later. The police spread video material of the alleged seller. The warning signs returned in the streets in Amsterdam and flyers and posters were deployed at crucial places in the city. Also people could test their drugs at 30 smartshops in the city, to know whether it was real heroine.[6]

Aftermath

The weekend after the two British men died, a minute's silence was held by thirty-seven amateur football matches in the Novahomes Plymouth and West Devon Combination league in honour of two. Neither has been named by the Foreign Office following a request from their families. One of their old clubs, Plymouth Falcons, postponed their upcoming match with Plymouth Spurs.[7]

Controversy

Drugs expert Dr Adam Winstock has questioned whether the drug dealer wasn't murdering the buyers on purpose, instead.[8] He also mentions that the street price of white heroin is three times the price of cocaine, which makes the scenario of a drug dealer, a person driven by the desire of profit, very unlikely to have accidentally happened once, and much less so to have happened multiple times for more than two months.

See also

References